Assessing the iPad

I’ve been obsessing about the iPad for at least two years. In a post called The Perfect Law School Laptop in February of 2008 I suggested that a perfect law school laptop would:

  • Cost less than $2,000
  • Have sufficient power to handle daily applications
  • Incorporate truly exceptional WiFi
  • Use a 10″ – 12″ screen (so as to not get in the way in crowded classrooms)
  • Ideally be light and thin
  • Go for hours and hours on a battery charge
  • Provide tablet capabilities (this was not a must-have)

In July, 2008 an Apple patent filing got me wondering if Apple was utilizing some sort of brain-scanning technology in their design process:

In fact, I’ve been wishing Apple would create some sort of lightweight hybrid cross between a Newton and a MacBook for years now. Perhaps Apple has been reading my mind?

Then in April of last year all the excitement around netbooks compelled me to opine that Apple would likely opt for a tablet device rather than a netbook. I figured Apple might build such a tablet around the tremendously successful iPhoneOS:

The real key to the success of a Mac tablet would lie in applications. Rather than scaling the Macintosh experience down to a small device, I wonder if Apple might instead scale up the iPhone/iPod touch experience to a tablet. Zillions of application developers have jumped into the iPhone/iPod touch market, hoping to strike gold. If Apple could give these developers the opportunity to easily adjust their iPhone/iPod touch apps for use with a new tablet, the chicken-and-egg problem of getting developers on board would be solved.

Tempted yet again, I wrote in July that an Apple tablet could be a wonderful device for law students:

A thin touchscreen tablet built around ubiquitous connectivity could be the perfect computing device for law students, particularly if Apple were to sell it for less than the price of a MacBook.

You can probably already guess that I think the iPad will be a game-changer. Of course I’m not alone in my Apple tablet obsession. Pretty much everyone in the computing world has an opinion about the iPad, whether positive or negative.

I’m curious about your opinions. Do you think an iPad would be a viable replacement for a MacBook in law school use? Would you buy an iPad for on-campus use and keep a laptop for home and the library? Are you excited by the concept but waiting for the next version of the iPad? Do you feel a touchscreen will just never work on your primary computing device? Is the “closed” nature of the App Store a problem for you? Do you see legal textbooks ever coming to the iPad?

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